The items in the middle column, each one presumably corresponding to the name on the left, were more difficult to characterize. Across from the name "Alderin, farmer" was written, "3 farm dogs, 1 pig." Across from the second instance of the name "Alderin, farmer" was written, "Book: The Kissing Traditions of Monsea." Across from the name "Annis, teacher" was written "Grettel, 9." Across from "Barrie, ink-maker": "Ink, every kind, too much to quantify."
Across from "Bessit, scribe": "Book: Monsean Ciphers and Codes; paper, too much to quantify."
It was an inventory. Except that the middle column of inventoried items seemed to be as crowded with people —"Mara, 11," "Cress, 10"—as it was with books, paper, farm animals, money. Almost all of the people named as inventory were children. Girls.
And that wasn't all this paper told her, not by a far shot, for Bitterblue recognized the handwriting. The paper, even, and the ink. One remembered such particulars when one had kill ed a lord with a knife; one remembered accusing the lord, before kill ing him, of stealing his people's books and farm animals. She drew the list to her nose, knowing how the paper would smel : just like the charter of the people from the town of Danzhol.
One lonely puzzle piece clicked into place. "This is an inventory of items Leck stole?" asked Bitterblue shakily.
"In this case, someone else stole them, but it's clear that it was on Leck's behalf. Those are the types of things Leck liked to col ect, and the little girls clinch it, wouldn't you say?"
But—why hadn't Danzhol simply told her that he'd stolen from his townspeople on Leck's behalf? That his ruin had begun with Leck's greed? Why hide behind hints when he could have defended himself with that truth? She would have listened to that defense, no matter how mad or disgusting he was. And why had the people of Danzhol mentioned missing farm animals in their charter, but not their missing daughters? She had imagined that Leck had taken castle people, city people. Those were the people the fablers talked about in their stories. She hadn't known that his reach had extended to the distant country estates of his lords.
And that wasn't all . "Why would you be stealing these things back?" she asked, almost frantical y. "Why would this list make its way to you, not to the queen?"
"What could the queen do?" asked Saf. "These items were stolen during Leck's reign. The queen has issued blanket pardons for all crimes committed during Leck's reign."
"But, surely, she hasn't pardoned Leck's crimes!"
"What did Leck ever do for himself? You don't think he marched around smashing windows and grabbing books? I told you, these things were stolen by someone else. That lord who just tried to kidnap the queen, actual y, and ended up poked in the gizzard," he added, as if this piece of trivia should amuse her.
"It makes no sense, Saf," she said. "If these people sent this list to the queen, she would find some legal way to provide remuneration."
"The queen is looking ahead," Saf said glibly, "haven't you heard? She has no time for all the lists she would receive, and we manage it quite wel , you know."
"How many lists are there?"
"I expect every town in the kingdom could provide one, if pressed," he said. "Don't you?"
The names of children crowded thick before her eyes. "It's wrong," she insisted. "There must be a legal recourse."
Saf took the papers from her hands. "If it's any comfort to your law-abiding heart, Sparks," he said, folding the papers up again, "we cannot steal what we cannot find. It's rare that we locate any of the items on these lists."
"But you just told me that you manage it quite wel !"
"Better than the queen could," he said, sighing. "Have I answered your question?"
"What question!"
"We're playing a game, remember?" said Saf. "You asked me why I stole a gargoyle. I told you. Now I believe it's my turn. Were your people part of the resistance? Is that how your father was kill ed?"
"I don't know what you're talking about. What resistance?"
"You don't know about the resistance?"
"Perhaps I cal it by a different name," she said, doubting this but not caring, for her mind was still wrapped up in the last matter.
"Wel , it's no secret," he said, "so I'll explain it for free.
There was a resistance movement in the kingdom while Leck was alive. A small group of people who knew what he was—or who knew it part of the time, at least, and kept it in writing—tried to spread the word, remind each other of the truth whenever his lies grew too strong. The most powerful among them were mind readers, who had the advantage of always knowing what Leck was trying to do. A lot of the members of the resistance were kill ed. Leck knew they existed and was always trying to stamp them out.
Especial y the mind readers."
Bitterblue was paying attention now.
"You really didn't know," Saf said, noting her surprise.
"I had no idea," she said. "That's why Leck kept burning Teddy's parents' print shop, isn't it? And that's how you knew about burying. Your family was part of this resistance and kept written records of the old traditions, or something.
Right?"
"Is that your second question?" asked Saf.
"No. I'm not wasting a question on something I already know the answer to; I want to know why you grew up on a Lienid ship."
"Ah. That's an easy one," he said. "My eyes settled when I was six months old. Leck was king then, of course.
Gracelings in Monsea were not free, but as you've already guessed, my mother and father were in the resistance.
They knew what Leck was, most of the time. They also knew that Gracelings in Lienid were free. So they took me south to Monport, snuck me aboard a Lienid ship, and left me on the deck."
Bitterblue's mouth dropped open. "You mean they abandoned you. To strangers who could've decided to throw you overboard!"
He shrugged, smiling lightly. "They saved me from Leck's service, Sparks, in the best way they could manage. And after Leck died, my sister went to great lengths to find me— even though all she knew about me was my age, my eye colors, and the ship they'd left me on. Also, Lienid sailors do not throw babies overboard."
They turned onto Tinker Street and drew up outside the shop door. "They're dead now, aren't they," she said. "Your parents. Leck kill ed them."
"Yes," he said, then reached out to her when he saw her expression. "Sparks, hey—it's all right. I never really knew them."
"Let's go in," she said, pushing him off, too frustrated with her own helplessness to show him the sorrow she felt.
There were crimes for which a queen could never provide enough remuneration.
"We've got one more round of questions, Sparks," he said.
"No. No more."
"I'll ask a nice one, Sparks, I promise."
"A nice one?" Bitterblue snorted. "What's your idea of a nice question, Saf?"
"I'll ask about your mother."
It was the very last thing she had the energy to lie about.
"No."
"Oh, come on. What's it like?"
"What's what like?"
"To have a mother."
"Why should you want to ask me that?" she snapped at him, exasperated. "What's wrong with you?"
"Why are you biting my head off, Sparks? The closest thing I ever had to a mother was a sailor named Pinky who taught me to climb a rope with a dagger in my mouth and piss on people from the topmast."
"That's disgusting."
"Wel ? That's my point. Your mother probably never taught you anything disgusting."
If you had any idea what you were asking me, she thought.
If you had the slightest idea to whom you were speaking.
S he could see nothing sentimental or vulnerable in his face.
This wasn't his prologue to pouring out the heart-rending tale of a child sailor on a foreign ship who'd yearned for a mother. He was merely curious; he wanted to know about mothers, and Bitterblue was the only one made vulnerable by the question.
"What do you mean, you want to know about her?" she asked with slightly more patience. "Your question is too vague."
He shrugged. "I'm not picky. Is it she who taught you to read? When you were young, did you live together in the castle and eat your meals together? Or do castle children live in the nurseries? Does she talk of Lienid? Is she the person who taught you to bake bread?"
Bitterblue's mind flickered around all the things he said, images coming to her. Memories, some of them wanting precision. "I did not live in the nurseries," she said honestly.
"I was with my mother most of the time. I don't think it was she who taught me to read, but she taught me other things.
She taught me mathematics and all about Lienid." Then Bitterblue spoke another certainty that came to her like a thunderbolt. "I believe—I remember—my father taught me to read!"
Grasping her head, she turned away from him, remembering Leck helping her spel out words, in her mother's rooms, at the table. Remembering the feel of a small , colorful book in her hands; remembering his voice, his encouragement, his pride at her progress as she struggled to put letters together. "Darling!" he'd said.
"You're fabulous. You're a genius." She'd been so small that she'd had to kneel in the chair to reach the table.
It was an utterly disorienting memory. For a moment, in the middle of the street, Bitterblue was lost. "Give me a mathematics problem, would you?" she said to Saf unsteadily.
"Huh?" he said. "You mean like, what's twelve times twelve?"
She glared at him. "That's just insulting."
"Sparks," he said, "have you quite lost your mind?"
"Let me sleep here tonight," she said. "I need to sleep here.
Can I sleep here?"
"What? Of course not!"
"I won't snoop around. I'm not a spy, remember?"
"I'm not certain you should come in at all , Sparks."
"At least let me see Teddy!"
"Don't you want to ask your last question?"
"You'l owe me one."
Sapphire considered her skeptical y. Then, shaking his head, sighing, he produced a key. He opened the door a Sparks-sized crack and motioned her inside.
TEDDY LAY FLAT and limp on a cot in the corner, like a leaf in the road that's been snowed on all winter and rained on all spring; but he was awake. When he saw her, the sweetest of smiles spread across his face. "Give me your hand," he whispered.